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Tokens

The Future of Money in the Age of the Platform

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Longlisted for the Financial Times Schroders Business Book of the Year Award 2023
BEST BOOK OF THE YEAR: GQ, Los Angeles Times, Wired
The essential guide to this new landscape of NFTs, Web3, Crypto and DAOs and a warning of the political consequences of what happens when platform capitalism comes for the money in your pocket

Wherever you look, money is being re- placed by tokens. Digital platforms are issuing new kinds of money-like things: phone credit, shares, gift vouchers, game tokens, customer data—the list goes on. But what does it mean when online platforms become the new banks? What new types of control and discrimination emerge when money is tied to specific apps or actions, politics or identities?
Tokens opens up this new and expanding world. Exploring the history of extra- monetary economies, Rachel O’Dwyer shows that private and grassroots tokens have always haunted the real economy. But as the large tech platforms issue new money-like instruments, tokens are suddenly everywhere. Amazon’s Turk workers are getting paid in gift cards. Online streamers trade in wishlists. Foreign remittances are sent via phone credit. Bitcoin, gift cards, NFTs, customer data, and game tokens are the new money in an evolving economy. It is a development challenging the balance of power between online empires and the state. Tokens may offer a flexible even subversive route to compensation. But for the platforms them- selves they can be a means of amassing frightening new powers.
An essential read for anyone concerned with digital money, inequality, and the future of the economy.
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    • Kirkus

      September 1, 2023
      A scholarly investigation of the role of online tokens, which "are both more and less than money." O'Dwyer, an Irish lecturer in digital cultures, examines a question that yields complex answers: What is money, and how does it differ from other significations of value? A classic example of the latter are the giant stones of Yap, the Micronesian island, which have been shorthanded as "primitive" money. Not quite so, writes the author: The stones are really "value contracts" that constitute "an invisible ledger held in trust by the Yapese community." When one fell into the sea while being transported from a neighboring island, all agreed that the stone retained its value as a measure against which to gauge transactions. Consider how blockchain works, and consider how "non-fungible tokens" are given a value that doesn't align with commonsense economics, and those primitive measures suddenly don't seem so primitive after all. Today, writes O'Dwyer, tokens "can be used to market insubstantial things--famous people's farts, virtual kittens, skins in Fortnite--to make ephemeral things solid enough to enter the economy," whereas money stands for solid things that circulate in proxy, such as the bars of gold tucked away in Fort Knox. Cryptocurrency, the accoutrements players buy in Second Life, NFTs--all are something like money, yet something not like it, too. Whatever they are, O'Dwyer observes, tokens come at great cost--not to the money economy, per se, but instead to the environment. "In 2006," writes the author, "the average Second Life avatar consumed more electricity than the average Brazilian." What's more, she notes, the famous anonymity of cryptocurrency is not the norm in the token world. Where cash can change hands unrecorded, most electronic transactions are so thoroughly tracked that such things as "Venmo stalking" have lately become commonplace. A cautionary, comprehensive look at money and its virtual discontents.

      COPYRIGHT(2023) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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  • English

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